Wednesday, November 02, 2005

Tomatoes

One summer
in our new garden
we grew tomatoes
and carrots
and runaway zucchini
under a strong Utah sky
We worked so hard
at making things grow
not knowing what the future
would hold
And the following autumn
far from our garden
I would hear from you
how wild vines now grew
where none had been planted
Except that the fruit
was small and bitter
and so different
from what we had wanted
In my mind
I can still see you
working there in the sun
tending to the plants
so tired and hot
and oh so very young
so very
very young

Smiles and All the While

In the sunshine air
I see you there
in a memory
small and happy
running up the stairs
to the waterslide
cold water rushes down
together with you and smiles
and all the while
the heat
is surrounding the moment
along with the man
who gave us ice cream
you and I
until time
took away was
leaving now
a song
that plays sweetly
in the background of life.

Dinner In Baghdad

Ali hated Saddam Hussein. He especially hated the man’s face, not just because it was the face of evil, or because it stared at you from nearly every street corner in Baghdad. No, he hated the face because on the day a bullet had been discharged into the skull of Ali’s uncle, Saddam’s face had shown no flicker of emotion or regret. It had merely watched impassively, while smoking a cigar. How strange that in just a few minutes, that very same face would be peering into the menu in Ali’s hands.

In the distance, automatic weapons sputtered in the evening air. Although officially denied, Ali knew that it was the Americans. Soon, Baghdad would be liberated and Iraq’s henchmen would be hunted down and killed. It was a good time to be an inconsequential nobody.

The maitre de suddenly snatched the menu from his hands.

“Get to the table. Make sure nothing is wrong.”

Ali moved toward the table prepared for Saddam and his party. Off to the side, a separate table for his food taster had been arranged. Although loved by his people, Saddam had witnessed the agonizing death of nine different food tasters throughout the years. If the man died, the entire restaurant staff was executed. If the food taster merely got sick, then just the chefs were beaten to death. Ali smiled at the thought, as the head chef was a Baathist party member who, despite his loyalty to Saddam, was praying that their illustrious leader would not show.

Ali again carefully checked the arrangement of the silverware. One mistake could result in Saddam’s displeasure, and displeasure was not something Saddam liked feeling. If at all possible, it was best to avoid contact with Saddam or members of his family. But for Ali, tonight, that would not be so. Tonight, Ali would not only meet Iraq’s glorious leader, he would sink a knife into his throat before anyone could stop him.

Sensing eyes upon him, Ali looked up to find the other waiter, Kareem, watching suspiciously. Did Ali’s face betray his intent? He had gone to great lengths to conceal his family affiliation and his hatred of Saddam. To the best of his knowledge, no one knew about his uncle.

Kareem’s true motivation was betrayed by a petty sneer. It wasn’t suspicion that made him watch Ali, but envy. Kareem had wanted the prestige of serving Saddam’s party. In Kareem’s small world, a brush with greatness would bring hours of bragging rights. Ironically, he had been trumped out of the honor by a man soon to be shot by the President’s body guards. Kareem was not happy.

From the kitchen came a loud noise and some shouting. The maitre de jumped and ran to discover the cause. Ali and Kareem were suddenly left alone, the other patrons having been pushed out the door over an hour before.

“I know what you are thinking,” spat Kareem.

A twitch below Ali’s eye accompanied his response. “I am thinking that you should go help Hafad wash dishes...”

Kareem glowered, but said nothing. More than once, Ali had found him flirting with the young dishwasher. In Iraqi society, men who liked other men were not tolerated, and often severely persecuted. Unless, of course, they were men of power.

The maitre de returned from the kitchen. “It is a blessing Saddam is late.” He squinted at Kareem. “Be useful. Help clean up the mess in the kitchen.”

He scowled at Ali. “I trust nothing is out of place?”

“Everything is exactly as it should be,” Ali replied.

“Make sure all of the silverware is accounted for. We had to give an exact count.”

He handed Ali a scrap of paper. “Here is the inventory. Re-count it all very carefully. If we are over, throw it away out back. If we are under, Allah help us.”

Ali stared at the inventory list, and thought about the knife taped under the nearby table. Did they really count all of the silverware, or was it just another one of the infamous myths that Saddam liked to propagate as a way of keeping the populace cowed?

Outside, a car slowly passed the restaurant. Both men’s eyes snapped in the direction of the sound. Perhaps it was one of the grey Mercedes sedans carrying Saddam’s thugs. Sweeping through the streets in advance of Saddam’s main party, they would assure that passers-bye and errant pedestrians were properly searched and beaten. As of late, with the Americans approaching, they were even more ruthless, lest anyone give away Saddam’s position and claim the millions of American dollars the US military was offering in reward.

Little did Ali know that on an apartment rooftop a block away, a silhouette was whispering coordinates into a satellite cell phone. One way or the other, Saddam Hussein would not see another day.

Ali began to worry about the knife under the table. How could he have been so stupid? He would have to remove it, return it to its rightful place, and then quickly improvise another method of killing Saddam.

The maitre de paced by the front door. In the kitchen, a chef was yelling at Kareem. Ali slid his hand under the table and began removing the knife.

Outside, a car sped past, and then another.

Then, a strange noise. Like the sound a barrel makes rolling across a concrete floor. And then, nothing.

The restaurant was leveled in an instant and a crater left in its place. A small portion of Ali’s leg was discovered in the debris. After careful testing, US Army forensics determined it wasn’t Saddam Hussein. The evil leader of Iraq had apparently changed his dinner plans. Back in the United States, the nightly news showed the huge bomb crater, and spoke of the restaurant where Saddam was thought to have been dining.

There was no mention of Ali.